Kelley Saveika v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 8, 2012
Docket03-11-00070-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Kelley Saveika v. State (Kelley Saveika v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelley Saveika v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-11-00070-CR

Kelley Saveika, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 7 OF TRAVIS COUNTY

NO. C-1-CR-07-503140, HONORABLE ELIZABETH ASHLEA EARLE, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


A jury found appellant Kelley Saveika guilty of cruelty to animals. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 42.092(b)(3) (West 2011). After electing to have the trial court set punishment, Saveika received ninety days of confinement, suspended pending eighteen months of community supervision. Saveika filed a motion for new trial, which the court denied. On appeal, she raises two points of error, arguing that she was selectively prosecuted and denied effective assistance of counsel at trial. We affirm the trial court's judgment.



BACKGROUND

In 2006, Saveika began volunteering with an animal rescue group called Siamese Rescue. As a member of that group, Saveika provided foster care to cats from the city-operated animal shelter, Town Lake Animal Center (TLAC), that were at risk of being euthanized. Eventually, Saveika established her own rescue operation, "Rescuties," which she operated out of her Austin home. Once TLAC approved Rescuties to provide foster care, the shelter contacted Saveika directly about at-risk cats. (1)



The investigation and seizure

In 2007, the Austin Police Department (APD) received a report of possible animal cruelty from Emancipet, an organization that operates a low-cost preventative veterinary clinic where Saveika had been bringing cats. Detective Karen Duncan began an investigation and, upon searching the records system at TLAC, learned that Saveika had taken over ninety cats from the shelter on behalf of "Rescuties" in a seven-month period. After meeting with Saveika's private veterinarian and with the staff at the Emancipet clinic, Duncan went to Saveika's home to discuss the matter. Although Saveika was not at home, Duncan noticed an odor of urine and feces from outdoors and viewed some cats and debris through the windows. Duncan obtained a warrant to seize the animals in the home.

On November 8, 2007, APD executed the warrant for the seizure. Duncan met Saveika at her front door, informed her of the warrant, and entered the home. While the other officers waited outside, Duncan used a video camera to record the conditions. She found the apartment overrun by cats and full of clutter and filth including cat urine and feces, much of it diarrhea, on almost every surface. Half of the floor in one bedroom was "squishy wet" with urine. An overpowering ammonia odor caused Duncan's eyes to sting and irritated her throat. The officers outside found the odor to be noticeable from a distance of sixty feet.

After Duncan completed her video, the waiting officers entered Saveika's home to seize the animals. According to the officers, the inside of the home was covered in debris, urine, and feces; was lacking in clean water; and was full of visibly sick or dying cats. Overturned furniture, computers, garbage, food, and clothing were scattered everywhere. While there were several litter boxes in the apartment, these were "way overused, full, without having been cleaned." The officers saw only a few sources of water, all of which were contaminated with food or feces or covered in an oily film. There were numerous cats moving through the apartment, some in cages, and others shut in a bathroom. The officers saw discharge from the nose and eyes of many cats and heard a loud wheezing noise coming from at least one; another cat had what looked like a severe eye injury. Inside a bathroom cabinet, Duncan discovered one obese cat that "looked like it was nearly dead" and "could barely move." Finally, on a second pass through the apartment to ensure no additional cats were hiding, the officers found a dead cat.

Ultimately, APD and animal control removed the dead cat and forty-seven living cats from the apartment. The living cats were taken to TLAC, where the obese cat from the bathroom cabinet died during the first night after the cats were seized. Eventually, the surviving cats were all transferred to rescue groups or adopted. Saveika was arrested and charged with cruelty to animals. See id. § 42.092(b)(3).



The trial

At Saveika's trial before a jury, the State presented testimony from Duncan and other officers about the investigation and seizure, and the photographs and video they had taken were admitted into evidence. The State also called two witnesses to testify to the condition of Saveika's cats in the months prior to the seizure. Dr. John Samon, a veterinarian with a private practice in Austin, treated about thirty of Saveika's cats over a two-year period. Samon testified that the health of the cats grew "much, much worse" over the course of the fifty to seventy visits Saveika made to his office. Samon at one point instructed Saveika that all cats need fresh, ample water and clean litter boxes and explained that failing to provide these could cause dehydration, malnutrition, the spread of disease, and even death. Samon testified that Saveika understood these ramifications and assured him that she was complying with his instructions. However, her cats continued to show the same problems afterward.

Samon also expressed concern to Saveika over the number of cats she had on file, and he advised her that she should have no more than ten to twelve. Samon explained that he was concerned with the spread of upper respiratory infections (URIs) and giardia, an intestinal parasite, among Saveika's cats. He testified that both conditions can result in severe, even fatal, dehydration. Shortly after Samon told Saveika to keep fewer cats, she ceased bringing her cats to him.

The State also called Carrie Voss, the administrator at the Emancipet clinic who had contacted APD about Saveika's animals. Voss testified that in 2007, the staff at her clinic began to complain about Saveika bringing in so many cats with conditions like dehydration, URIs, and the odor of urine and feces. Technicians told Saveika that an abnormal number of her cats had these conditions and instructed her to increase the cats' access to water. Eventually, the Emancipet staff grew concerned that the cats were not healthy enough for spay or neuter surgery and had to turn many away.

In addition, the jury heard testimony from TLAC veterinarian Rachel Hays regarding the condition of the cats during and after the seizure. Hays attended the seizure with the APD officers to assess the cats' conditions and to help capture them and transport them to the shelter. Hays testified that she "didn't see any clean water anywhere in the house" and thought the cats were "obviously ill" given their sneezing, nasal discharge, and crusty discharge from their eyes.

After the live cats were transported to TLAC, Hays performed "cage-side exams" of all the cats and more extensive evaluations of some of them. At trial, Hays identified reports from TLAC's computer system reflecting the cats' examination notes and laboratory results.

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